英語で'モルヒネ'をどう言うのですか

The stories of my adventures (and no doubt disasters) as I take on the mantle of a English teacher with a large, undisclosed company somewhere in the savage wilderness that is Japan

Monday, September 15, 2008

These boots were made for something...

“What have you been doing since you last posted?” I imagine you ask.

My answer: “Walking”

A week and a half ago, my bike tire decided to take early retirement and deflated on the way home from work. For someone who needs a bike for everything, my commuting time to anywhere else tripled. I had to start waking up early half an hour earlier just to get to work, which is bad for someone who wakes up half an hour late every other day. Also, it's still humid over here, so I was showing up to work every day dehydrated and plastered in sweat.

So, what should one do when they're walking everywhere? Go hiking in your spare time.

Last Monday, Tsuna and I went to Nagano Prefecture to hang out in Kamikochi up in the Northern Japanese Alps. The first thing I thought when getting out of the bus was “Wow, it's cold,” followed by “Hey, I remember what 'cold' feels like!” Kamikochi is situated in a small valley with a lake fed by a mountain stream. It is famous for the Kappa Bridge, its picturesque and decidedly Swiss scenery as well as the freshness of its food. I didn't try much of the aforementioned food as I was too busy devouring a bag of Smith's Salt and Vinegar Potato Chips that was given to us by a friend who recently visited Australia. The problem is that when you've had one chip after a potato-chip fast of two years, you can't stop until after you've had one thousand.

One week later and I was walking from Magome, a small town in Gifu to Tsumago, a slightly less smaller town in Nagano. The trail was part of the Nakasendo, the old mountain trail from Kyoto to Edo (now Tokyo). Although for some parts of the route we had to walk along a highway, for the most part the trail consisted of a cobblestoned path through the woods. Along the way we saw waterfalls, trees that had been clawed either by a bear or Wolverine from the X-Men, enough small dogs to start a handbag pet store and an old man who was giving away free tomatoes (which in my opinion is a fair price).

All in all, on-top of my regular "Going to the store to get sushi" strolls, I walked an additional 20 kms this week. That's not bad for someone who likes to sit down at a computer for 8 hours to play Warcraft. Anywho, I finally had the time to get my bike repaired today, so my “walking like a filthy pleb” days are over. But it was interesting to walk a few miles in another man's shoes, although the other man happened to also be me

-Blake

1 Comments:

At 10:20 pm, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Yo live in Japan! Train capital of the world. If there isn't a train to where you want to go just demand one and in a week there will be an express line at your doorstep!

 

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